11
3
Sound Waves Can Fight Fires Without Water (scientificamerican.com)
2
Adopters of 'zone zero' fared better in L.A. County fires, investigation finds (latimes.com)
1
In Seattle, juggling two or more jobs isn't just for low-wage workers (seattletimes.com)
2
Starlink's method of dodging solar storms may make it slower, for longer (theregister.com)
7
What if the aliens come and we just can't communicate? (arstechnica.com)
15
Mozilla Firefox gets new anti-fingerprinting defenses (bleepingcomputer.com)
12
For rural Californians, unreliable power has become the norm (hcn.org)
3
After another IT outage, Alaska Airlines is bringing in outside help (seattletimes.com)
5
Her 401(k) Contributions Vanished–and Her Company Had No Answers (wsj.com)
9
Why Signal's post-quantum makeover is an engineering achievement (arstechnica.com)
93
[flagged] Portland is not burning. Here's live context and sourced fact checks (isportlandburning.com)
1
West Coast's two monster faults could trigger back-to-back earthquakes (latimes.com)
2
Why iRobot's founder won't go within 10 feet of today's walking robots (arstechnica.com)
17
The space race is transforming Southern California's economy again (latimes.com)
2
Space Rock That Punched Through Roof Almost Struck Resident (nytimes.com)
2
Crews and filmmakers built Hollywood. What happens to them as AI expands? (latimes.com)
3
In a digital age, old-fashioned watchmaking schools are in demand (latimes.com)
2
One Year After Fisker's Bankruptcy, Ocean Owners Are Still Paying the Price (autoevolution.com)
1
The West's data centers suck (water and power) (hcn.org)
6
Earth will spin faster on July 22 to create 2nd-shortest day in history (space.com)
1
A project to track the termination of grants of scientific research agencies (grant-watch.us)
2
The Reasons Your Appliances Die Young (nytimes.com)
6
Strangers in the Middle of a City: The John and Jane Does of L.A. Medical Center (latimes.com)
11
SmartAttack: Air-Gap Attack via Smartwatches (arxiv.org)
82
Top researchers leave Intel to build startup with 'the biggest, baddest CPU' (oregonlive.com)
27
Polish engineer creates postage stamp-sized 1980s Atari computer (arstechnica.com)
1
'Losing Big' Review: Gambling It All Away (msn.com)
2
As tariffs stoke economic fear around the world, Puerto Rico sees opportunity (msn.com)
3
The company with the largest aircraft now has a hypersonic rocket plane (arstechnica.com)
2
'At Work With' an air traffic controller – for birds – at the Portland airport (opb.org)
3
Amid tariff turmoil, these warehouses are in big demand in L.A (latimes.com)
7
Why restarting a power grid is so hard (arstechnica.com)
4
Leaked messages expose trade secrets of prolific Black Basta ransomware group (arstechnica.com)
1
Don't call it a drone: Zipline's uncrewed aircraft wants to reinvent retail (arstechnica.com)
2
Boeing Is Pushing to Withdraw Guilty Plea Agreement (msn.com)
3
FBI Denver Warns of Online File Converter Scam (fbi.gov)
4
Likelihood of Mount Spurr eruption in next few weeks or months has increased (alaska.edu)
105
May 5, Microsoft's Skype will shut down for good (arstechnica.com)
21
MapQuest's 'Name Your Own Gulf' (mapquest.com)
27
National Institutes of Health cuts support to universities (arstechnica.com)
3
Apple must face suit over alleged policy of underpaying female workers (arstechnica.com)
2
Field of mounds on Mars may be sign of erosion at the edge of an ocean (arstechnica.com)
1
Puget Systems Most Reliable Hardware of 2024 (pugetsystems.com)
1
FAA Acknowledges G550 In-Flight Object Strike at FL270 (ainonline.com)
30
A man keeping hope, and 70-year-old pinball machines, alive (arstechnica.com)
1
Northern California earthquake threatens rare fish in remote Death Valley pool (sfchronicle.com)
6
UK tracks Russian spy ship amid cable concerns (ukdefencejournal.org.uk)
1
Study reveals Starship's sound levels; shows differences between SLS, Falcon 9 (nasaspaceflight.com)
2
Summit supercomputer gets virtual farewell on Zoom (tomshardware.com)
3
Code libraries posted to NPM try to install malware on dev machines (arstechnica.com)
1
Usace unleashes nearly intolerable pet cuteness upon the world – again (army.mil)
13
Location tracking of phones is out of control (arstechnica.com)
200
Winamp deletes entire GitHub source code repo after a rocky few weeks (arstechnica.com)
2
We're going to the Solar System's most intriguing frontier (arstechnica.com)
1
You're right not to rush into running AMD, Intel's new manycore monster CPUs (theregister.com)
1
Google Rolling Out Theft Detection Lock, Offline Device Lock, and Remote Lock (threads.net)
54
The Globus INK: a mechanical navigation computer for Soviet spaceflight (2023) (righto.com)
2
Most Amazon workers considering job hunting due to 5-day in-office policy: Poll (arstechnica.com)
5
Cyberattacks Plague the Health Industry. Feds' Response Feeble and Fractured (kffhealthnews.org)
3
Ancient US air traffic control systems won't get a tech refresh before 2030 (theregister.com)
2
In the room where it happened: When NASA nearly gave Boeing all the crew funding (arstechnica.com)
6
Grid-scale batteries: They're not just lithium (arstechnica.com)
1
Archaeologists believe this Bronze Age board game is the oldest yet found (arstechnica.com)
8
The winners of the 2024 Ig Nobel Prizes (arstechnica.com)
138
Data sleuths who spotted research misconduct cleared of defamation (arstechnica.com)
2
BepiColombo's best images yet highlight fourth Mercury flyby (esa.int)
2
Boeing grounds 777x test fleet after failure of key engine mounting structure (theaircurrent.com)
22
Intel Raptor Lake 0x129 CPU Microcode Performance Impact on Linux (phoronix.com)
3
Puget Systems' Perspective on Intel CPU Instability Issues (pugetsystems.com)
9
Yes, NASA could bring Starliner's astronauts back on Crew Dragon (arstechnica.com)
2
Cloudflare once again comes under pressure for enabling abusive sites (arstechnica.com)
1
What is 'surveillance pricing,' and is it forcing some consumers to pay more? (latimes.com)
1
13th and 14th Gen Intel CPU instability also hits servers (tomshardware.com)
2
What happens if you shoot down a delivery drone? (techcrunch.com)
3
They're cashing in millions through the Oregon Lottery's shadow economy (oregonlive.com)
4
NASA may have just lost one of its two spacesuit providers (arstechnica.com)
2
Peter Beck talks Rocket Lab's past and future, competition with SpaceX (arstechnica.com)
90
Seattle library network outage nears a month (seattletimes.com)
4
Should you upgrade GPU or CPU for faster gaming? Many hardware combos tested (tomshardware.com)
2
The Future of Streaming (According to the Moguls Figuring It Out) (nytimes.com)
1
Lego went from humble toy and destroyer of bare feet to black market item (latimes.com)
17
$2.4M Texas home listing boasts built-in 5,786 sq ft data center (tomshardware.com)
27
Edward C. Stone, 1936-2024 (caltech.edu)
1
How long has North Korea been working on its new rocket, and who's helping? (arstechnica.com)
76
Oracle Java police start knocking on Fortune 200's doors for first time (theregister.com)
2
Amboy – a Mojave Desert ghost town and Americana icon fights to survive (latimes.com)
2
Did a sudden reduction in shipping pollution inadvertently stoke global warming? (latimes.com)
2
Harlan Ellison's L.A. Shangri-la offers a window into his complicated soul (latimes.com)
1
Some Seattle library services still unavailable after cyberattack (seattletimes.com)
3
Why a Japanese billionaire just canceled his lunar flight on Starship (arstechnica.com)
1
Ocean technology hub AltaSea blooms on San Pedro waterfront (latimes.com)
1
GamersNexus Warranty Response Kit (gamersnexus.net)
1
Palos Verdes Peninsula landslides can tell us a lot about L.A. history (latimes.com)
46
DNS glitch that threatened Internet stability fixed; cause remains unclear (arstechnica.com)
26
Multi-million dollar Cheyenne supercomputer auction ends with $480,085 bid (tomshardware.com)
30
'The bane of retail.' Many big chains now lock up all kinds of merchandise (latimes.com)
1
Broken EV chargers become a business opportunity for L.A.'s ChargerHelp (latimes.com)
1
Ex-Workers at Temu Parent Say Noncompete Penalties Crush Their Finances (wsj.com)
9